Stonebridge logo
  • Courses

    Course Categories

    Nursing Midwifery Health Professionals Social Science Medicine and Healthcare Professions Science Humanities Business and Management Social Work Education Health All Access to Higher Education
    Early Years Educator and Childcare Teaching Assistant
    Health and Social Care
    English and Maths Functional Skills
    Veterinary and Zoology Qualifications All Veterinary Science and Animal Care Qualifications
  • How it works
  • Help and support
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Access My Learning
Student Login

OR

Click here to login
Atom LMS Logo

Forgot Password?

  • Stonebridge Home
  • Our Blog
Our Blog
October 12, 2012

Structured Procrastination

Written by Andy Martin

Procrastination: the plague on self-discipline. We all do it. We all know we do it. And we all know we shouldn’t do it. And yet, we have a hard time not doing it. What is it that makes us so prone to postponement?

John Perry, philosophy professor and author of The Art Of Procrastination: A Guide To Effective Dawdling, Dallying, Lollygagging And Postponing, says that we procrastinate because we find the task at the top of our priority list intimidating. To combat our natural flaw, Perry explains the art of Structured Procrastination, or using the power of procrastination to be productive. Basically, provided the task at the top of the priority list is mammoth and overwhelming, the more important tasks underneath it look like a walk in the park.
Not doing the very thing that we want done seems bizarre and illogical. However, Perry asserts that squelching our natural tendency toward putting things off is equally bizarre and unnatural; that it is an uphill battle waged against our innate humanity. We procrastinate in order to assert our independence and to prove that we are self-ruled when we feel our lives are out of our control. Rather than flogging our flaws and minimizing our commitments, as so many anti-procrastination campaigns encourage, structured procrastination lets us maintain our motivation of too many things to do, and direct our flaws toward a positive end.
Some of you may agree with Perry whereas some of you may think structured procrastination is absurd and that we all just need to light a fire under our seats. I thought I was the latter … until I realised I’m writing this blog instead of the proposal I have due.
If this topic interests you, check out our Time, Stress & Crisis Management course or our Counselling, Psychotherapy and Psychology courses.

 

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn


More from Josie Says

Advice on Stress Management Counselling Distance Learning Course Josie Psychology Psychotherapy Stonebridge Time Management

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Our Associations.

Skills & Education Group Access Access to Higher Education ncfe-logo Training Qualifications UK Innovate Awarding

What our customers think.

Trustpilot

Sign up to our Newsletter.

There's a whole lot happening at Stonebridge and in the world of learning. Sign up for our newsletter and you'll be among the first to know about it! All fields are required.

Stonebridge logo
Stonebridge Associated Colleges Limited is registered with the UK Register of Learning Providers: UK Provider Reference Number is 10006352.
Cookie policy | Data Protection and Privacy Statement
Content and Images © Stonebridge Colleges. All rights reserved, 2025.

Stonebridge Associated Colleges Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority under firm reference number 673930.

  • Privacy Notice
  • Careers
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Distance Learning Courses
  • Home Learning Courses
  • Home Study Courses
  • Blog
  • FREE when you enrol
  • Refer a Friend
  • TOTUM
Chat with us